A directory of TRT and hormone therapy clinics in your city. Browse physician profiles, read patient reviews, and reach out directly — no lead forms, no sponsored rankings.
The TRT industry has a marketing problem: too many clinics lead with promises, not lab panels — and patients end up in protocols that weren't designed for their actual numbers.
Elective care is a multi-visit decision. Use this shape to check the practice’s process at the consult — not after the deposit clears.
An initial consult should be a conversation — not a sales pitch. Bring a written list of goals, current medications, and any prior procedures. Ask who is on the room, who runs the practice, and what happens if you decide not to proceed.
Evaluation is where candidacy is determined — physical assessment, contraindications, expectations, photographs where applicable. A reputable trt & hormone clinics provider will tell you when you are not a candidate, even if the practice loses the booking.
Treatment plans should be itemized in writing — what's included, what's optional, what's out of scope, what aftercare costs are separate. A protocol that "varies based on need" without ranges should prompt a follow-up question.
Follow-up cadence belongs in the plan, not in the post-visit phone tag. Ask who handles complications, what after-hours coverage looks like, and how revisions or touch-ups are billed if outcomes don't match the plan.
Start with your city and what you want to address — low testosterone evaluation, TRT initiation, ongoing management, or a second opinion on your current protocol. You don't need a diagnosis before your first appointment; you need a physician who will order the right labs.

A ranked index of TRT and hormone clinics actively practicing in your area. No out-of-area telehealth mills padded in, no sponsored filler. Every clinic shown has real Google reviews and a complete profile.

Look at the treating physicians — their specialty (urology, endocrinology, internal medicine, men's health), their approach to monitoring, and how they describe their protocol philosophy. A good clinic will mention labs, follow-up intervals, and individualized dosing.

Reach the clinic directly — no lead form, no high-pressure callback. Most TRT clinics offer an initial consultation or phone screen. Come with any prior bloodwork and questions about their lab panel, monitoring frequency, and what a typical treatment pathway looks like.

Evidence-based hormone care starts with measurement, not assumption — a good clinic insists on the bloodwork before anything else.
We cover 190 cities across the US.
“The clinic that shows you your labs before recommending a protocol is the one practicing medicine, not marketing.”
A plain-English guide to evaluating TRT clinics — what labs should be ordered before starting any protocol, the difference between physician-supervised and telehealth-only models, what monitoring looks like over time, and the questions worth asking before you sign up.
Fonteum does not verify provider credentials or supervision relationships. The questions below name the external authority you can use to confirm each answer at the source.
Names + credentials of the person actually treating you — not the practice's marketing voice. Confirm the medical license at the state medical board's lookup tool. Confirm board certification at ABMS or the relevant specialty board.
Many elective treatments are delegated to nurses or aestheticians under a physician's protocol. Ask the practice to name the supervising physician on record and confirm that physician is in-state and available during procedures.
Reputable practices have written protocols for managing complications — emergency contact, partner hospital relationship, after-hours coverage. Ask before the procedure, not after.
Aftercare windows, included visits, costs of touch-ups, what triggers a revision conversation. A practice that resists writing this down before payment is a flag worth heeding.
A legitimate TRT evaluation starts with a comprehensive lab panel — typically total testosterone, free testosterone, LH, FSH, estradiol, PSA, complete blood count, and metabolic panel. Your physician will review your symptoms in the context of your labs before recommending any treatment. If a clinic offers to start you on a protocol without labs, treat that as a significant warning sign.
We list TRT and hormone clinics active on Google Business in each city and rank results primarily by real Google rating and review volume. We don't sell ranking placement and don't accept payment to move a clinic up the list. Final selection of a provider should involve verifying physician credentials and completing an evaluation.
Nothing. Browsing, searching, and contacting clinics is entirely free. We don't run lead forms, pop-ups, or referral widgets. The directory exists to help you find a clinic, not to monetize your search.
A TRT clinic typically specializes in hormone management and offers regular monitoring, flexible dosing adjustments, and streamlined access to the full range of treatment options (injections, gels, pellets). A general practitioner can prescribe TRT but may have less experience managing protocols or monitoring the downstream effects. Either can be appropriate depending on your situation.
Common delivery methods include weekly or twice-weekly testosterone cypionate or enanthate injections (the most cost-effective), daily topical gels or creams, long-acting pellets inserted under the skin every 3–6 months, and transdermal patches. Each has different absorption profiles, dosing flexibility, and cost implications. Your physician should explain the tradeoffs for your case.
TRT is ongoing rather than curative — it replaces what the body isn't producing. Stopping treatment typically causes testosterone levels to return to pre-treatment baselines within weeks to months, depending on the method used. Some men use ancillary medications (like hCG or clomiphene) to help preserve natural production. Discuss this with your physician before starting.
Standard monitoring typically includes labs every 6–12 weeks when initiating or adjusting a protocol, and every 3–6 months once stable. Panels usually include testosterone levels, hematocrit (to check for erythrocytosis), PSA, and estradiol. Clinics that don't mention monitoring as part of their program should be asked directly how they manage it.
No. We're a directory. When you contact a clinic, you go directly to their practice — we don't capture your information and sell it to competing clinics. That's the model we were built specifically to avoid.
Good hormone care starts with the right physician. Find yours here.
Browse clinics near youNo two patients respond identically. Lighting, anatomy, healing biology, and protocol adherence all change the outcome. A practice promising a specific result is selling a guarantee that elective care cannot honestly make.
Patient-selected gallery photos are marketing — not clinical evidence. Lighting, posture, and post-procedure photography are routinely staged. Treat galleries as the practice's best case, not the median case.
When Fonteum publishes a source-cited field on a profile, the chip names the authority and the last-checked date. Fields without a chip mean we have no public-record match — never that we have performed our own credential check on the practice.
Care fit, patient choice, and safety oversight without the sales pressure.
Profiles show what each provider actually treats and the consultation format on offer. You see who's the right fit before you book.
Every contact reaches only the provider you picked. No shared lead pools, no upsell calls from third parties.
Where a public board licensure record exists, we link to it. Listings describe scope of practice, never promise an outcome.
4.9★ average Google rating across listed TRT & hormone clinics.